1. CRIME (from school) - 2x 16
1. CRIME (from school) - 2x 16
Rp 412 m allotted
for one classroom
2. Joko - 2x 25
Djoko Santosa installed
as city military commander
Jakarta has Maj. Gen. Djoko Santoso as new military commander
on Wednesday, amid the controversy over the discontinuing of the
Indonesian Military (TNI)'s territorial role which is said has
become a tool for the force to gain political power.
Djoko, a former Pattimura Military commander who oversees the
conflict-torn Maluku and North Maluku double as chief of security
restoration operations in Ambon, played an important role in
ending the sectarian conflict.
Born in Surakarta, Central Java, Aug. 9, 1952, Djoko is a 1975
graduate in infantry class of the National Military Academy.
Djoko had been assigned to former province East Timor in 1976,
1981 and 1988 under Seroja military operations and had also put
as the youngest member of the House of Representatives from TNI
faction in late 1990s.
His wide knowledge of social and political realms made him
appointed as assistant of social and political affairs at his
current post and deputy assistant of social and political affairs
for the headquarters' territorial chief of staff office.
Djoko, who is married with Angky Retno Yudianti with two
children, was appointed chief of staff of Central Java's
Diponegoro Regional Military Command in 2000 and was later
assigned chief of Malang-based Second Division of the Army's
Strategic Reserves Command in East Java in 2001.
Army Chief of Staff Gen. Ryamizard Ryacudu, who officiated
Djoko's installment ceremony, said in his speech that Djoko will
face a challenging task in safeguarding the capital ahead of and
during the 2004 general election.
"Jakarta is the center of government, politic and economy ...
a barometer to the country's security face.
"With the general election come near, there is an intensifying
heat among political elites ... the general election will become
a ring of physical fight among us children of the nation,"
Ryamizard read his speech.
He ordered all military commands to monitor and to stifle any
activities considered will lead to such a communal fight.
In an interview with The Jakarta Post and Bisnis Indonesia
daily newspaper, Djoko said he has another formula to maintain
security in the capital which he learned from his latest post in
Maluku provinces: the bonds of good relationships.
"With a good approach to all political and society groups, I
believe security in Jakarta will go on stable," he said.
"The police holds the role to maintain order and security and
to uphold the law, with the military to back up. But for
emergency situation, we will be at front," Djoko added.
3. School (from crimes) - 1x 40
People told to help combat street crime
4. Bus - 2x 16
Plan to import
used buses blasted
5. Speak - 2x 20
'Many places in city
are no longer safe'